Devils extend winning streak by topping Canadiens

NEWARK, New Jersey (Ticker) -- The New Jersey Devils are in a
position that seemed unattainable when Martin Brodeur went down
with an injury back in November - first place at the All-Star
break.

Defensemen Johnny Oduya and Paul Martin each recorded a goal and
an assist as the Devils extended their winning streak to five
games with a 5-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on
Wednesday, completing their unlikely rise to the top of the
Atlantic Division standings at the midway point of the season.

All-Star Zach Parise and Patrik Elias also scored a goal and set
up another while Travis Zajac added a tally for the Devils
(29-15-3), who ended the first half of the season atop the
division - one point ahead of the idle New York Rangers
(28-16-4).

Blue-liner Josh Gorges and Matt D'Agostini scored and Carey
Price made 29 saves in his first start since December 30 for the
Canadiens, who have lost two straight.

Price, who is slated to start for the Eastern Conference in
Sunday's All-Star Game at the Bell Centre, stopped nine of 10
shots in relief during Tuesday's 4-2 loss to the Atlanta
Thrashers. It was his first appearance since suffering an ankle
sprain just over two weeks ago.

"Right off the start, I felt pretty solid," Price said. "I feel
like I'd rather be playing tomorrow night, but I get an
opportunity to keep sharp going into the All-Star Game, so I'm
looking forward to that."

Brodeur injured his elbow in a 6-1 victory over the Thrashers on
November 1 and has not played since, paving the way for Scott
Clemmensen to take over the starting goaltending duties ahead of
Kevin Weekes.

"It's a credit to the players, staying with it and staying
strong," Devils coach Brent Sutter said. "We've dealt with
adversity the right way. The guys in that room have been
through a lot, and they don't get rattled."

Despite entering the season with eight career wins, the
31-year-old Clemmensen has been a mainstay in net, posting a
19-9-1 record.

"Whatever goalie comes in, he's not going to be as good as Marty
Brodeur, because he's the best in the world," Clemmensen said.
"I can't fault them for it, but people thought, 'The Devils are
not going to be as good now.'"

Clemmensen kept Montreal off the scoreboard in the first period
by stopping nine shots, and turned aside 12 more in the second
as Martin, Zajac and Oduya staked New Jersey to a 3-1 lead by
the end of the session.

"I don't feel like I have to win games by myself," said
Clemmensen, who made 26 saves. "I don't think that the team
feels like they have to work harder to compensate for me being
in there, either. The team has confidence in me, I in them."

The rise to the top was not lost on Martin, who was plus-3 to
raise his season mark to plus-12.

"I'm sure once (Brodeur's injury) happened, everyone kind of
counted us out as far as being in first place," Martin said.
"But I think that's the character and pride we have in this
locker room. For now, the guys have stepped up and shown they
really want to win."

Martin committed the first mistake of the game with a
cross-checking penalty but immediately made up for it when he
beat Price between the pads on a breakaway with 8:08 left in the
first for his fourth goal of the season. John Madden stole the
puck and Elias sprung the defenseman on the clean break down the
center of the ice moments after Martin exited the penalty box.

"(Elias) made a great saucer pass with me streaking, right on
the tape, and I just happened to find (a hole between the
pads)," said Martin, who could not recall having another
breakaway in his NHL career. "We work on breakaways in
practice, and the more you actually try to make a move, the more
chances are you're going to lose it."

The Devils doubled their lead at 6:18 of the second, when Zajac
scored his 15th goal of the season, tapping in a rebound from
the doorstep after Price stopped his deflection of a shot by
Parise.

Parise is the lone Devil headed to Montreal for Sunday's
All-Star Game.

Montreal halved the deficit with 6:04 left in the middle period,
three seconds after a power play expired. Gorges broke a
25-game scoreless drought, putting a loose rebound into the open
top of the net from in front.

Gorges had not scored since November 24, netting just a single
goal in the first 184 games of his career before that.

The Devils restored the two-goal bulge with 1:40 left in the
second, when Oduya took a feed from Martin and blasted a slap
shot from the left point through traffic and past the glove of
Price. It was his first goal since December 19th, which also
marked Martin's last multi-point effort.

"We played very solid here tonight," Sutter said. "We played
well. We were able to score at right times. We did a lot of
good things tonight."

Parise added his team-best 28th goal 2:05 into the third, when
his pass from the left faceoff circle went off the stick of a
lunging Sergei Kostitsyn and between Price's pads.

Montreal cut the deficit to 4-2 during a power play less than
six minutes later as D'Agostini took a slap shot that hit
Oduya's stick and fluttered past a screened Clemmensen on the
short side.

The Canadiens got their captain, center Saku Koivu, back into
the lineup after a 17-game absence due to a high ankle sprain.